Race tension over Uretiti Beach crab hunting

LEFTOVERS: Pig heads and chicken carcasses are used as bait to attract crabs at Uretiti.

Anti-Asian sentiment is bubbling under the social media surface after pigs heads and chicken carcasses were left littering a beach where a crab hunter drowned on Christmas Day.
Website and Facebook comments have sent a strong message to hordes of Aucklanders of Asian descent heading to Uretiti Beach to gather paddle crabs - you are welcome, but take your rubbish home with you.
The tone of some messages is stronger, with references to the visitors being unwelcome at "our beach" and threats to "not hold back" if visitors were found with rubbish.
Police are warning people not to take matters into their own hands, after sentiment escalated following the discovery of a pig's head and numerous chicken frames that had been used as crab bait.
Paddle crabbing at Uretiti hit the headlines again these holidays after an Auckland man of Chinese descent drowned while paddle crabbing on the beach on Christmas Day.
Twenty other crab fishers also had to be rescued. The dead man was the second Chinese person to drown on Christmas
Day at Uretiti Beach while catching paddle crabs in recent years. Hui
Jin, 47, a cafe owner, drowned there on December 25, 2011.
But as
well as the physical danger to people catching crabs on the beach, some
of the fishers have also been leaving behind large amounts of dead
animals on the beach, much of which is then washed into the sea,
attracting sharks and also washing up on nearby Ruakaka Beach.
The mess
has had residents up in arms, with the Ruakaka Beach Facebook page
publicising the mess and garnering plenty of critical comments from
upset Northlanders, with some threatening to physically confront anybody they catch dumping rubbish.
Senior
Sergeant Rob Huys, at the Northland Police District Command Centre,
said police had not received any complaints about activity on Uretiti
Beach, but he warned anybody concerned about the situation not to take
matters into their own hands.
"People should not attempt to take the law into their own hands, regardless of the situation," Mr Huys said.
"If
they have any concerns they should ring their local police station and
we will assess things and deal with it appropriately. The last thing we
want is for something that's relatively minor, escalating into something
more serious that could lead to negative outcomes for everybody."
Posts on the Ruakaka Beach Facebook page said the community welcomed visitors, but dumping animal carcasses on the beach was not on.
The
posts did not condone violence, but said the situation was a concern.
As well as being disgusting it was also potentially dangerous.
Ministry
of Primary Industries Northland district compliance manager Steve
Rudsdale said the daily limit for paddle crabs was 50, and there was no
size limit.
Mr Rudsdale said honorary fisheries officers kept a
close eye on the paddle crabbers and none had been found to have taken
more than their daily limit.
He said some of the fishers were
spoken to a couple of years ago about not leaving rubbish on the beach
and the problem seemed to improve.* Any suspicious activity in the marine environment can be reported to 0800 4 POACHER (0800 476 224).